Mumbles
Philosopher
- Joined
- Dec 9, 2008
- Messages
- 8,726
Why does it matter that's it's only a handful of tweets?
If I saw a handful of tweets promoting the modern myth that the prefatory language of "well regulated militia" carries no jurisprudential weight, I'd call that an example of "American gun culture" even if only a few people were tweeting on that narrow topic.
If I saw a handful of tweets saying that women must avoid orgasm until their wedding day because [Bible verses] I'd call that an example of "purity culture" even if only a handful of tweeters made that specific claim.
If I saw a handful of tweets demanding that some specific speaker must be deplatformed, I'd call it an example of "cancel culture" even if only a couple people were trying to make it happen.
In each case, the handful of tweets carries memes from a larger cultural context, and in each case they are attempting to shift the overall culture to be more in line with their own subcultural norms.
And if I saw, say, one post saying "Hey guys, Jim Henson's a violence-loving psycho" and a reel of Wilkin's Coffee ads, I'm just as likely looking at a joke as I am "the woke mob attacking Jim Henson!" The Muppets has disclaimers on a few episodes not because of any mob, it's because they're applying a standard that most people seem to be okay with for more brazenly bigoted stuff like Song of the South or the Dukes of Hazzard.
Worry more about the mostly right-wing crusade against "woke courses (or "social Justice" or whatever) in modern universities. Y'know, stuff that shows actual hostility to education, to the point of outlawing particular words and phrases (as Idaho did just the other day, joining Florida because of course Florida would rush into this)